You probably don't need me to tell you this, but prospects are more skeptical online than ever before.
The Holy Grail of online marketing is getting the prospect's email address (so you can start building a permission-based marketing relationship with them).
In the not-too-distant past, you could generate leads online simply by offering a free newsletter or special report. This doesn't work so well anymore. Why?
The reason is simple: there's too much ‘junk' being offered, and prospects are wise to this. People just won't give up their email address for a junky ‘special report' like they used to.
So what's a marketer to do? Here are three ways to break through skepticism and get your prospects to give you their email address:
1. Offer Superior Premiums
Offering a superior premium will help you “cut through the clutter”, but to be effective your premium must be clearly superior.
Commonplace and boring: “Special Reports” and “Free Tele-Seminars”.
Better: software that performs a specific task, a free telephone consultation (make it clear this is not a sales pitch), or a free membership website.
2. Use Video Testimonials
There's a reason infommercial producers make their 30-minute ads over 70% testimonials: testimonials overcome skepticism.
These days, it's cheap and easy to make video testimonials for your website. Get your best customers singing your praises on video, and put these snippets on your website. Lots of them.
3. Use The “Reciprocity Sequence Method”
You've no doubt heard of the ‘Reciprocity' principal:
If I give you a gift, you feel compelled to reciprocate.
The trouble is, your prospects often have heard of it too, rendering it somehwat less effective.
I use a technique I call the “Reciprocity Sequence Method”… which is simply giving your prospects a series of gifts so that the “Reciprocity Impulse” becomes almost overwhelming.
It sounds elementary, but few people do it. And it's very powerful.
Think about how you can ‘stack' a sequence of 3-5 gifts in a short period of time, and THEN make an offer to your prospect.
Key points to remember: keep the sequence confined to a short time period, make the gifts relevant to (and an enhancement of) your core offer, and make the offer immediately after giving the final gift.
While it's true that skepticism is at a higher level than ever, it's also true that breaking through is easy when you know how.
What do you think? Have you run into increased skepticism in your marketing – and if so, how have you successfully over come it? Post your comments below!